Customer Loyalty, we all want it. Don't we?
Some people say its dead - they say that customers are fickle, that they
don't want loyalty, that they just want the lowest price and the fastest
way to get it.
Some say that customers have changed and that the pursuit of
loyalty is foolish, since it's the customers that are not interested it in
it.
I don't agree. Loyalty is not DEAD, it's just sleeping.
I agree that customers have changed (because our needs have
changed.)
We're more demanding than ever before, we have more choices than
ever before, we're more educated than most of the companies we do business
with (about their products and their competitive position.)
And here's the
truth: we don't give our loyalty to companies that don't give their loyalty
to us.
Companies have in the last ten years made it more difficult, more
confusing, and more frustrating to deal with them than ever before.
They
give all the "special offers" to the new customers; they've removed human
beings from answering phones and answering questions.
They make us pump our
own gas, check on our packages, book our own airline tickets and figure out
when they've made mistakes on our accounts.
They cut their training
budgets and have trimmed their service staffs to the bone.
They pay big
bonuses at the top, but at the bottom of the corporate pyramid, where the
customers lie (if they make the pyramid at all) they charge us fees for the
privilege of using their services!
Is it no wonder we've become rather selective to whom we pledge our loyalty?
No, customer loyalty is not dead, but it is ailing. It is given only to
those companies that earn it and keep earning it by delivering value and
positive experiences on a consistent basis.
Companies that want to Thrive.. not just survive in this century better
figure out fast that keeping more of their customers, and keeping them
happy is a critical economic necessity.
Good and loyal customers are critical to profitability. Estimates are that
it costs 6 -30 times more to get new customers than it does to maintain the
ones you have.
If you keep losing customers and have to keep replacing
them, it makes sense that you are spending money on sales and marketing
that could be going elsewhere.
It's your LOYAL customers that give you referrals and sing your praises in
your advertising and testimonials.
Referral business is like "free" new
customers. So the money you would have paid to GET the new customer drops
back down to your bottom line.
I find it is sadly true that most companies don't have a strategic plan for
keeping customers, keeping them happy OR keeping them coming back time and
time again with their money and their friends.
Even though Customer Loyalty
was determined to be a #1 concern of CEO's (according to the Conference
Board) how many companies do more than pay lip service to the importance of
customer service and loyalty in their organization? Your guess is as good
as mine.
Based on the service I receive as a customer, well, I can
understand why more customers aren't loyal, can you?
What can YOU do to change that? What can you do to turn the tide on this
disturbing trend and develop long lasting, loyal customer relationships?
And what's LOVE got to do with it?
Everything. Business is based on relationships and relationships are based
on qualities such as trust, respect, appreciation, understanding,
generosity, clear open and honest communication and heavy doses of
kindness, compassion and affection. Sometimes known as LOVE.
Studies show that the main reason customers will leave a company they are
doing business with is that they perceive the company does not care about
them or their needs.
And conversely, studies show that when asked why they
stay loyal to a particular company for a long time, customers respond,
"Because they cared about me." This perception and feeling of caring is the
emotional bridge between customer satisfaction and customer loyalty.
And,
it's often the bridge between lackluster profits and thriving good health
on the bottom line.
It about emotion. Loyalty is an emotional attachment to a company based on
the customer's subjective perception that the company is delivering the
value they desire or need, when and how they need it.
It's based on their
needs, and it's based on their experience of doing business with us. As a
customer myself, I know that the companies I chose to give my loyalty to
are those that make me feel good about the whole experience of doing
business with them.
When we FEEL good about doing business with a company we form emotional
ties, not just financial ties with them. Let's face it, customers are
emotionally attached to their money - if we want them to give some of it to
us - we need to get them emotionally attached to US.
Emotions have been "undiscussable" in business for a long time. "Feelings"
is the "F" word of the business world.
How many times have we heard that
we are to keep our feelings out of it, keep our emotions away from our
business decisions, and park our personal problems at the door? Sound
familiar?
Well I've learned that you cannot expect your staff to bring
their passion to work and but not their feelings. It just doesn't work
that way.
It's time we developed an emotional literacy in business.
Employees and Customers are people. People have feelings. And as people,
their decisions are effected by their feelings, whether they can identify
the feelings or not.
Any salesperson can tell you that while people make
decisions that look logical, they are more often than not, based on emotion.
As people we are perceptive, conscious, sensitive, alive and feeling
beings! It's an essential part of our nature.
When we recognize that in
business, we'll work harder at building the emotional equity with a
customer that determines whether or not they become a loyal customer or a
lost customer.
It is the perception, the feeling of being cared about that keeps the
customers coming back. And it's what we do to build and support and create
that feeling that creates a positive experience for the customer.
Every customer has two sets of needs. The business needs are logical,
rational, and practical.
The personal needs are emotional, illogical and
sometimes even irrational, but carry a lot of weight.
The fulfillment of
the customer's business needs is usually what gets them in the door in the
first place - you are selling what they need.
But it's the fulfillment of
the customer's personal needs that will keep them coming back. Once the
business needs are met, they often take a back seat to the customer's
experiential needs.
It's the quality of the emotional experience you have with a company that
will determine whether or not you want to keep recreating that experience.
We come back to companies that have what we want and create a positive
experience for us. We leave companies that don't have what we want or
create a negative experience for us. Experience is emotional.
When a customer walks away from the whole experience (your greeting,
interacting with your website, the dealing with people in your office..) of
doing business with you with positive emotions like happiness, joy,
delight, caring, security, welcome and appreciation - they will most
likely want to come back (if you recreate the positive emotions consistently.)
If they walk away from the experience with negative emotions like
frustration, anger, disgust, fear, incompetence, indifference, if they
leave with a lack of confidence, if they leave feeling stupid -- and if
that's what's delivered consistently - they usually don't stay around
unless they haven't YET found some other place to go.
It's the quality of the emotional experiences that customers have with you
that will determine whether or not they will continue to do business with
you over time.
What's LOVE got to do with it? Maybe more than we thought!
Tim Sanders, Chief Solutions Officer, Yahoo writing in "Love is the Killer
App," says "What do I mean by "love"? The best general definition that I've
read comes from philosopher Milton Mayeroff's brilliant book, On Caring.
Love, he writes, 'is the selfless promotion of the growth of the other.'
When you help others grow to become the best people that they can be, you
are being loving, and as a result, you grow."
What a great description for what we want to happen in our business
relationships!
I want to do business with a company that believes in the
selfless promotion of the growth of ME and my business!
I want to give my
money to companies that want to help me be the best ME I can be - whether
I'm buying cosmetics or computers or telephone service or food.
I want to
do business with someone who has my best interests in mind.
In lieu of that - I'll do my own research, haul my own lumber and pump my
own gas - but if I'm doing the service work - then I want the lowest price
possible!
I'm not loyal to companies that don't care enough about me to
make my experience with them easy, stress and hassle free, and pleasant.
How about you?
What's love got to do with it? A whole lot more than we ever thought. Let's
start doing a better job of creating experiences that the customer
perceives as positive, caring, and yes, maybe even loving.